Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Former Canadian Ski Coach Accused Of Sexual Assault To Ask Judge A Second Time For Bail

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Apr, 2015 08:55 PM
    SAINT-JEROME, Que. — The former Alpine Canada ski coach charged with sexually assaulting 11 young female athletes will make a second request for bail.
     
    Bertrand Charest's lawyer, Marc-Antoine Carette, is scheduled to make the case on April 29 to have his client freed pending trial.
     
    Quebec court Judge Michel Bellehumeur already denied Charest's bail request in March, claiming the ex-coach was a possible danger to the public. He also stressed the need to maintain the public's faith in the justice system.
     
    Carette said Wednesday that Charest is not a danger because the most recent charges against his client date back to 1998.
     
    The ex-coach is facing 56 charges in the alleged sexual assault of 11 young female athletes aged from 12 to 18, starting in 1991.
     
    Charest allegedly assaulted the women north of Montreal and in France, Austria, New Zealand and the United States.
     
    Alpine Canada said in a March statement it contacted the RCMP in 1998 about sexual-abuse complaints against Charest.
     
    The organization said it opened its own investigation early in 1998 and then told Charest he was being removed as a coach.
     
    Alpine Canada maintains it was not aware of the results of any RCMP probe.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Balance Or Bust? Debate Emerges Over Feds' Push To Eliminate Deficit In 2015

    The Harper government's stubborn push to eliminate the deficit in its election-year budget has opened a debate: should it even bother scrambling to balance the books at all, particularly with the financial sting of the oil slump?

    Balance Or Bust? Debate Emerges Over Feds' Push To Eliminate Deficit In 2015

    Jury Reaches Verdict For One Of Two Via Terror Suspects; Impasse For Other

    Jury Reaches Verdict For One Of Two Via Terror Suspects; Impasse For Other
    TORONTO — A Toronto jury has decided the fate of one of two men accused in an alleged terror plot to derail a passenger train, but will continue deliberating today on some of the charges against his co-accused.

    Jury Reaches Verdict For One Of Two Via Terror Suspects; Impasse For Other

    Fear Around Insanity Defence Found Groundless

    Fear Around Insanity Defence Found Groundless
    TORONTO — The notion that cold-blooded killers and violent offenders are taking advantage of a soft-on-crime justice system by feigning psychiatric illness to win a verdict of not criminally responsible and avoid punishment is a myth, a new study finds.

    Fear Around Insanity Defence Found Groundless

    Ex-student Leader Says Liberals And NDP Must Reject Pipeline To Win Quebec Seats

    Ex-student Leader Says Liberals And NDP Must Reject Pipeline To Win Quebec Seats
    MONTREAL — The NDP and the Liberals must stand against the Energy East pipeline if they hope to have success in Quebec come federal election time, says one of the faces of the province's 2012 student movement.

    Ex-student Leader Says Liberals And NDP Must Reject Pipeline To Win Quebec Seats

    Cleanup Efforts Underway After Blizzard Buries Parts Of Atlantic Canada

    Cleanup Efforts Underway After Blizzard Buries Parts Of Atlantic Canada
    HALIFAX — Services in Atlantic Canada's largest city were operating at reduced levels Thursday, but Halifax Mayor Mike Savage says he's confident work crews can dig the city out without declaring a state of emergency.

    Cleanup Efforts Underway After Blizzard Buries Parts Of Atlantic Canada

    Recommendations From Inquest Into Winnipeg Man's ER Death To Take Years

    Recommendations From Inquest Into Winnipeg Man's ER Death To Take Years
    WINNIPEG — Many recommendations from an inquest into the death of an aboriginal man during a 34-hour wait in a Winnipeg hospital emergency room will take years to implement.

    Recommendations From Inquest Into Winnipeg Man's ER Death To Take Years